Biomatrix for soft tissue regeneration

ABSTRACT

An implant for repair of a tissue defect which implant comprises a physiologically compatible load-bearing member having an element for securing under tension tissue adjacent to the defect to be repaired, an element for supporting a tissue reparative cell mass in the defect and a tissue reparative cell mass supported thereby. The implant can be a suture material having a cell containing matrix surrounding a central portion thereof. The matrix is preferably a gel or other material which the cells cause to contract, thereby drawing together the tissues surrounding the defect to which the implant is attached.

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 08/254,125, filed Jun. 6, 1994, abandoned.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

In the context of skeletal tissue repair, tissue regeneration therapy is the local application of autologous (host-derived) cells to promote reconstruction of tissue defects caused by trauma, disease or surgical procedures. The objective of the tissue regeneration therapy approach is to deliver high densities of repair-competent cells (or cells that can become competent when influenced by the local environment) to the defect site in a format that optimizes both initial wound mechanics and eventual neotissue production. For soft tissue repair, it is likely that an implant vehicle(s), will be required to 1) transport and constrain the autologous cells in the defect site and 2) provide initial mechanical stability to the surgical site. In an optimal system, it is likely that the vehicle will slowly biodegrade at a rate comparable to the production of neotissue and development of strength in the reparative tissue (1).

The tissue regeneration therapy approach contrasts significantly with more passive approaches to wound repair in which no attempt is made to deliver or to recruit reparative cells to the defect site. For example, in the case of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) repair with synthetic (presumably "inert") polymer grafts, the healing process depends entirely on local cellular responses to initiate and control the incorporation of a permanent implant (2).

Recently, more active devices have been tested using matrix scaffolds designed to deliver and/or to direct cellular processes. These have included, for example, tendon or ACL repair (3-7), meniscus repair (8-11) and articular cartilage repair (12-15). Alternatively, the use of locally delivered peptide factors, intended to stimulate recruitment of reparative cells and their attachment and/or differentiation, have also been investigated (16-19).

In perhaps the best documented tendon repair experiments to date, Silver, Dunn and their colleagues have described extensive investigations of the performance of collagen fiber prostheses for Achilles tendon (3-5) and anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) (6,7) repair in rabbits. They report that at 52 weeks postimplantation in the Achilles tendon defect, the reconstructed tendon (prosthesis+repair tissue) was about 66% as strong as the normal tissue for all implants tested, including an autologous tendon graft and glutaraldehyde- or carbodiimide-crosslinked collagen fiber composites (5). Both the autologous implants and the carbodiimide-crosslinked prostheses were observed to biodegrade rapidly, then regain strength rapidly as new tissue was produced. Glutaraldehyde cross-linked prostheses biodegraded much more slowly in the Achilles tendon model and became surrounded by a thick capsule that eventually stopped the degradation process. While the neotendon developed in these studies was similar to normal, it was not identical. For example, the crimp angle of the neotendon collagen was similar to normal tendon in all implants, but the length of the neotendon crimp was less than about 30% of normal for the collagen prosthetic devices. In addition, the moduli of the neotendons formed from the more rapidly degrading implants (autologous tendon and carbodiimide-crosslinked collagen fibers) were significantly lower than for normal tendon. Finally, the neotendon observed did not assemble with the fascicle microarchitecture of normal tendon. These researchers conclude that the rate of degradation of the prosthesis, and the consequent transfer of load to the new tissue, may be as important as the initial prosthesis tensile strength in determining the ultimate properties of the repair tissue (5). A similar generation of neoligament was observed in the ACL implants after 20 weeks, although the recovery of strength of the tissue may be somewhat slower in the avascular synovial environment (7).

Based on this evidence, it is clear that at least in the healthy animal, repair-competent cells can be recruited from the tissues surrounding defects in tendons and ligaments, and that these cells will initiate the production of neotissue. It remains unclear from these investigations to what extent the recruited cells represented differentiated phenotypes (e.g., tendon fibroblasts), as opposed to undifferentiated pluripotent stem cells, or whether increased numbers of such cells would enhance the rate of synthesis or the microarchitecture and mechanical properties of the neotissue produced.

Many cell-mediated processes related to the production of skeletal tissue depend on the number of cells involved, both in the rate and magnitude of the effect. For example, in the in vitro production of connective tissue, the rate of collagen gel contraction by fibroblasts embedded in the gel is dependent on the number of cells present in the culture (20). A similar gel-contracting activity has also been correlated with cell density-dependent secretion of a contraction-promoting factor by endothelial cells (21). In addition, the extent of fibroblast orientation in cultures grown on collagen gels is directly related to the initial cell density (22). This cell orientation effect has been correlated with the observation of "organizing centers" in the culture, the number of which has been suggested to be a direct indicator of morphogenetic capacity at the molecular and cellular levels (23).

Cell density-dependent differentiation was clearly demonstrated in the culture of chick limb bud cells (24). When cultured at very low density (10⁶ cells/35 mm dish), these cells do not exhibit chondrogenic or osteogenic properties. At "intermediate" cell culture densities (2×10⁶ cells/35 mm dish), the cells exhibit the maximum frequency of osteogenesis, while at still higher density (5×10⁶ cells) the maximum frequency of chondrocyte phenotypes is observed.

In each instance cited above, the number of cells initially present strongly influences the nature of cell-mediated processes involved in skeletal tissue formation and the rate at which these developmental and physiological processes occur. Therefore, in the reparative processes of skeletal tissues, Caplan and coworkers have hypothesized that some minimum threshold of cell number may be required at the repair site before formation of "normal" neotissue can occur (25). Furthermore, in many cases, this minimum threshold may exceed the number of recruitable reparative cells, including less committed cells that can differentiate to repair competent phenotypes; therefore, the extent to which the reparative process can occur may be limited by this single parameter.

Preliminary investigations of the tissue regeneration therapy approach have recently been conducted in a tendon repair model in the Achilles tendon of the rabbit (25). There were three components to this model: the defect, the cells and the vehicle to deliver the cells to the defect site. The delivery vehicle in this model must restrain the cells at the defect site, stabilize the tissue mechanics, then slowly biodegrade as new tissue is produced.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

By the device and method of this invention the present investigators have made it possible to achieve tissue repair of connective tissue defects, such as tendon, ligament, fibrocartilage and articular cartilage, with greatly enhanced, on the order of doubled, biomechanical strength and stiffness of the reparative tissue produced by are aligned and elongated cells in their "biomatrix" implant compared to defects repaired only by constitutive recipient tissue. In addition, the defect site resolves towards complete repair much more rapidly when using the biomatrix device and the "regenerative tissue repair" procedure of the invention.

The present invention relates to an implant for repair of a tissue defect, which implant comprises a physiologically compatible load-bearing member having means for securing under tension tissue adjacent to the defect to be repaired, means for supporting a tissue reparative cell mass in the defect and a tissue reparative cell mass supported thereby. In its simplest form, the invention involves the production of an appropriate polymeric material containing the cells around a fibrous, degradable fixation device which is then employed to secure the cells in the desired anatomic location. This approach is a general surgical method for delivering and securing autologous cells to soft tissue defects, including tendon, ligament, meniscus or muscle, in which the cell delivery device is fastened at one or both ends to soft tissue interfaces.

In a preferred embodiment, the invention is directed to an implant comprised of a contracted gel matrix which includes mesenchymal stem cells, in particular human mesenchymal stem cells, wherein the gel matrix containing the mesenchymal stem cells has been contracted while under tension.

While one preferred material for the gel matrix employed in the specific example above was composed of purified Type I collagen fibrils, other materials that can likewise be used include, for example, 1) cell-contracted collagen gels containing other components of the extracellular matrix, such as proteoglycans or glycosaminoglycans, glycoproteins (fibronectin, laminin, etc.), other collagens (e.g., Types II or IV), elastin and/or bioactive peptide growth factors or cytokines; 2) other biopolymers such as fibrin; 3) synthetic biodegradable fibers made from such polymers as polylactic or polyglycolic acids, polycaprolactones, or polyamino acids, or their copolymers, which could be cast or wound into or onto the suture; or 4) composite structures such as collagen/polylactic acid structures.

In addition to simple single-filament sutures, multifilament devices produced by braiding, weaving or knitting biodegradable fibrous materials including sutures or collagen fibers or the like can also be used. Cells could in general be attached to such devices by cell-mediated processes such as contraction of collagen gels, or by non-cell-mediated physical or chemical processes such as gel-casting gelatin, or a winding of cell-containing fibrous or membranous structures around the device. Such implantation devices could have one or more needles attached at each end of the device to facilitate fixation to soft or hard tissues, and could be of a variety of geometries including planar, cylindrical or tubular construction, depending upon the specific tissue to be repaired, the mode of fixation of the implant and/or the method used to attach the cell-containing biomatrix combination to the implantation device.

The present invention relates to a device and method for implantation of any type of cells that will effect tissue repair. Although the invention is not limited to any particular cell type, a particularly preferred embodiment includes human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), or any of their committed or differentiated progeny. Such cells may be used alone or in combination with other cells. The cells are preferably obtained from the animal for which the implant is intended, and can preferably be culture expanded prior to implant. The animal is preferably a human.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows a preferred embodiment of the biomatrix implant of the invention.

FIG. 2 shows a biomatrix implant of the invention as it is being prepared under tension in a mold assembly.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

In a specific embodiment of this invention, methods have been demonstrated for culturing MSCs or tendon fibroblasts onto double-needle Dexon sutures by causing the cells to contract collagen gels around the central region of the sutures. The autologous cell/collagen gel/suture composite device can be directly implanted between the free ends of full-thickness tendon defects, such as for repair of the human Achilles tendon, ligament such as for repair of the anterior cruciate ligament, or fibrocartilage such as meniscus, or the disc of the temporomandibular joint, or for repair of articular cartilage.

In the embodiment shown in FIG. 1, implant 1 comprises a strand of suture material 2 and a gel matrix 4 containing reparative cells 6 and which has been contracted around central portion of suture 2. Suture 2 has free ends 10 and 12 which are used to rejoin the tissue T adjacent the defect. As shown free ends 10 and 12 have been sewn into the body of the tissue thereby not only holding the ends of the tendon in place but also holding gel matrix 4 in position in the defect.

FIG. 2 shows a mold assembly 15 which can be used to form an implant of the invention. Mold assembly 15 includes mold 16 in which the cell-containing gel matrix is formed around suture 2 which is shown here with needles 3 and 5 at the ends thereof. Tension wire 18 which holds suture 2 under tension in mold 16 and incubation dish 20 in which the matrix preparation is incubated to set the gel. The tension applied to the gel matrix while the gel is being contracted (which as shown in FIG. 2 can be applied by tension wire 18) causes the cells within the matrix to align in the direction in which tension is applied to the matrix.

As shown in FIG. 2, tension wire 18 causes the gel matrix, during contraction to be placed under tension in the axial or longitudinal direction.

A specific embodiment of this is described in the example below.

EXAMPLE 1

A mold assembly was used to prepare an implant for repair of a tissue defect in accordance with the invention. Small, glass cylinders, 5 mm×27 mm, which had had their ends fused shut, were cut longitudinally through the center to form glass, canoe-shaped molds. Stiff surgical wires were bent to form small, bow-shaped tension wires with ends shaped to set just 2 mm deep into the glass molds. The glass mold was placed into a 100 mm culture dish with a suture spanning the tension wire situated in the center of the mold in preparation for the gel suspension to be poured. Autologous mesenchymal stem cells (4×10⁶ cells) were suspended in 0.5 ml of 2 X DMEM-LG and mixed thoroughly to create a single-cell suspension. Then 0.5ml sterilized type I collagen solution (Pancogene S™), Gattefosse SA, Lyon, France; 3 mg/ml; dialyzed into 0.001M HCl was added to the cell suspension and pipetted up and down to form a homogenous suspension of cells in the gel. This gel suspension was immediately poured into the prepared glass mold in the culture dish. The lid was placed over the dish and it was put into the incubator at 37° C. for 15-20 minutes to set the gel. After gelation was complete, the dish was flooded with medium without serum until the glass mold was covered and put back into the incubator for 4-6 hours. Contraction of the gel by the cells occurred to the extent that the gel was detached from the walls of the mold and decreased in diameter and length by about 10%. If the cells are cultured in this apparatus for approximately 20 hours, the gel contracts to approximately 60% of its original radial dimension. At the 4 hour time point, the gel was firmly attached to the central suture, such that the suture and tension spring could be lifted out of the medium, the tension spring removed, and the gel implanted in the surgical defect as described.

Tissue repair devices prepared by this procedure were implanted in rabbit Achilles tendon defect model either with or without a Vicryl sheath. Histological observations from these implants at 1, 3 and 8 weeks indicate that neotendon tissues are formed as early as 1-3 weeks by this procedure. These early neotendon tissues are morphologically similar to tissues produced from tendon cell or MSC implantation in the Vicryl sheath repair model at later timepoints.

EXAMPLE 2

MSC/Biomatrix Construct

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) cultured to confluency at the end of first passage are suspended in serum-free medium at a concentration of 8 million cells/milliliter. The collagen matrix consists of Type I bovine skin-derived collagen at 3 mg/ml. A 250 μl aliquot of this collagen suspension is combined with autologous MSCs (8×10⁶ cells/ml) suspended in 250 μl of 2X DMEM-LG and mixed thoroughly to create a single-cell suspension. The MSC concentration then becomes 4 million cells/milliliter. This cell suspension was immediately poured into the system of FIG. 2 composed of a wire spring device holding polyglycolic acid suture (Maxon Davis and Geck, size 4-0) in tension which is set into a glass trough approximately 1 cm in length with a volume of 500 μl.

The lid was placed over the dish and it is put into the incubator at 37° F. for 15-20 minutes to set the gel. After gelation was complete, the dish was flooded with medium without serum until the glass mold was covered and put back into the incubator for 4-6 hours. Contraction of the gel by the cells occurred to the extent that the gel was detached from the walls of the mold and decreased in diameter and length by about 10%. If the cells are cultured in this apparatus for approximately 20 hours, the gel contracts to approximately 60% of its original dimension in the radial direction. At this point, the gel was firmly attached to the central suture, such that the suture and tension spring could be lifted out of the medium and implanted in the surgical defect as described. Specific methodologies of mesenchymal stem cell recovery culture have been described (see Caplan, et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,486,359 (1996); Caplan, et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,226,914 (1993); and Caplan, et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,197,985 (1993)).

Suture Tensioning Device

The tension and reproducibility of the spring device used in the implant construction were tested. Suture pretensioning springs were prepared by bending 0.035" diameter stainless steel K wires (Zimmer, Warsaw, Ind.) around a mandrel. The distance between the ends of the K wire was set at about 7 cm. Each suture was pretensioned by compressing the spring so that its ends were 10 mm apart. To determine the reproducibility in tensioning the suture, we examined the variability in the initial shape of the springs and the ability of the compressed spring to provide a uniform restoring force. Seven springs were tested. For the unloaded springs, the initial distance between the ends and the angle formed by the two legs of the spring were then measured. The springs were mounted in grips on an Instron 8501 testing machine and the tips compressed until they were 10 mm apart. No significant differences were observed among the springs for any of the three parameters measured (p>0.05). The initial distance between the spring ends was 68.7±3.4 mm (mean±one standard deviation) and the initial angle between the legs of the spring was 58.0±3.8 degrees. The mean restoring force produced by the spring when the ends were compressed to 10 mm was 4.9±0.7N. Moreover, the relationship between tip-to-tip displacement and the spring restoring force was almost linear over the entire displacement range. Thus, the K wire provides a simple, sterilizable, and reproducible means for pretensioning the MSC/biomatrix/suture construct used to create the implant devices.

Surgical Model

With a rabbit anesthetized and in lateral recumbency, the lateral aspect of the limb was incised over the Achilles tendon region from the gastrocnemius to the calcaneus. Rabbit Achilles tendon consists of three tendon bundles encased in a common tendon sheath, two of which are fused bundles of the material and medial tendons of the gastrocnemius. The surgical defect was always created in the lateral tendon bundle. After incising through the tendon sheath, the superficial digital flexor was reflected medially to expose the lateral bundle. A gap defect one centimeter in length was created in the lateral bundle, beginning from a point about 8 mm proximal to the calcaneus. Defects received the contracted MSC/biomatrix construct (=treated) sutured across the gap in one limb, or a tension suture alone in the pattern of a modified Kessler (=control) in the contralateral limb. The tendon sheath was then closed along the length of the implant using a simple continuous pattern and the skin was closed with a continuous subcuticular suture.

Biomechanical Testing

After sacrifice, the paired tendons were immediately frozen. On the day of testing, left-right pairs of tissues were removed randomly, thawed and dissected, each one to create a full length tendon with a healing scar, proximal muscle sheath, and distal bone block. The sheath and bone block were used to grip the tendon for axial testing. The full length of each tendon was recorded along with the width and thickness at three locations along the scar (to compute cross-sectional area). Dye lines were placed at the proximal and distal edges of the scar to visualize where failure occurred during testing.

Each specimen was placed in a bath of warm saline (37° C.) mounted on an Instron 8501 testing system. Each tissue was tested to failure at a moderate strain rate (20%/second) while monitoring failure with video camera. In all cases, failure was initiated within the repaired gap region of the test sample. Five structural parameters were computed (stiffness of the tissue in the linear region, the maximum force at failure, the displacement to maximum force, the energy to maximum force, and the energy to failure). Using initial length between the grips and the cross-sectional area, five material parameters were computed (modulus of the tissue in the linear region, the maximum stress, the strain to maximum stress, and the strain energy densities to maximum stress and failure stress).

Thirty-nine paired rabbit Achilles tendon repairs were blindly tested. Thirteen pairs were evaluated at three time points after surgery: 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 12 weeks. In addition to the 13 pairs for biomechanical testing, three additional pairs of Achilles tendon repairs were submitted for histological testing. Five untreated tendon specimens were also tested to characterize the "normal" tissue properties.

Statistical Analysis

Both paired and unpaired comparisons were performed on the reduced data. Student t tests were conducted to detect within subject differences (paired left right comparisons) and across subject differences (unpaired comparisons between average treated and average control groups). Power analyses were also performed to determine the number of specimens needed to establish 90% confidence in detecting treatment related differences.

Histology

Specimens for histological evaluation were fixed for a minimum of 7 days in formalin before being placed in a VIP 2000 processor for dehydration through alcohol gradients (70%-100%), xylene, and finally to xylene substitute, Clear Rite (Richard-Allan, Kalamazoo, Mich.). At this point they were processed to PMMA embedding as described in the literature (Sterchi, 1995). Blocks were then cut to produce 5μ sections, affixed to glass slides, and stained with Toluidine Blue and Toluidine Blue/Basic Fuchsin (a Hemotoxylin/Eosin-like stain).

Results/Interpretation

Structural Properties: Normal structural and material properties of rabbit Achilles tendons are shown in Tables 1-A and 1-B.

                  TABLE 1-A     ______________________________________     Structural Properties of the Normal Rabbit Achilles Tendon               Stiffness                      F.sub.max                              Energy.sub.max                                        Energy.sub.failure               N.mm   N       N.mm      N.mm     ______________________________________     Means       36.5     189.0   555.5   901.1     Stand. Dev.'s                 10.6     26.8    178.2   317.2     S.E.M.      4.7      12.0    79.7    141.9     Number of Specimens                 5        5       5       5     ______________________________________

                  TABLE 1-B     ______________________________________     Material Properties of the Normal Rabbit Achilles Tendon            Modulus Stress.sub.max                              SED.sub.max                                        SED.sub.failure            MPa     MPa       N.mm.mm.sup.-3                                        N.mm.mm.sup.-3     ______________________________________     Means    337.5     41.6      3.9     6.7     Stand. Dev.'s              205.8     18.9      0.9     3.6     S.E.M.   92.1      8.4       0.4     1.6     Number of              5         5         5       5     Specimens     ______________________________________

The "percent of normals" data (Table 2) show the average structural values of the treated and control variables as percentages of the normal, surgically unaltered, Achilles tendons at 4, 8, and 12 weeks post-implantation. MSC treatment values appear above corresponding control values.

                  TABLE 2     ______________________________________     Time-Related Changes in Structural Properties of Treated     versus Sham Control Rabbit Achilles Tendon Repairs*.sup.,+               Stiffness                      F.sub.max                               Energy.sub.max                                        Energy.sub.failure     ______________________________________      4 Weeks            Treated     54.2%    65.8%                                        94.5%                                               78.8%            (MSC            Implants)            Sham     26.5     30.7   36.0   34.6            Control      8 Weeks            Treated  62.8     60.5   65.9   59.8            (MSC            Implants)            Sham     31.1     31.9   35.3   39.2            Control     12 Weeks            Treated  63.1     68.9   87.4   81.8            (MSC            Implants)            Sham     31.5     30.3   30.4   32.2            Control     ______________________________________      *All values are expressed as percent of normal rabbit Achilles tendons.      .sup.+ All treated values significantly greater than paired sham values      for all time points, and all response measures (P < 0.05, n = 13)

1. Stiffness (i.e., the ability of the tissue to develop an increment of force for a unit amount of displacement or deformation) of the treated tissues was 54.2% of normal after only 4 weeks, significantly greater than the suture control (26.5%) at the same early time point. This indicated that the treated tissues (and possibly the sutures which have not completely degraded) were already half as stiff as normal tissue; whereas the control tissues (also with suture) were only one-quarter as stiff. The average stiffness of the treated tissues increased modestly thereafter, however, achieving values of 62.8% and 63.1% of normal at 8 and 12 weeks, respectively. The stiffness of the suture controls also increased modestly with time, reaching values of about 31% at both time intervals.

2. The strength of the MSC-treated tissues was regained quickly at 4 weeks; treated tendon supported two-thirds (65.8%) of the maximum force (i.e., ultimate strength) of normal tendon, while the controls supported less than one-third (30.7%) at the same time point. This means the treated tissue can tolerate a large sudden increase in force up to two-thirds of its normal strength without failing, but the control cannot. These percentages are independent of time post-surgery. Thus: a) the treated tissues are twice as strong as the controls at all time points examined, and b) the strength of both the treated and control tissues remained about the same between 1 and 3 months after surgery.

3. The energies (areas under the force displacement curve) up to maximum force and complete failure for the treated tissues were nearly equivalent to values for normal tendons (94.5% and 78.8%) 4 weeks after surgery. The treated tissues withstood about twice the energy of the suture controls at all time periods. On average, and over times analyzed, the treated tissues required about 60-80% of the energy required for failure of normal tendon, whereas the controls required only 30-40%.

Table 3 summarizes the average values of the treated and control material parameters as percentages of the normal, surgically unaltered, Achilles tendons at 4, 8, and 12 weeks post-surgery. The material properties are derived from structural properties by normalizing to initial specimen areas and lengths. Since these material properties are independent of tissue size (length and area), they reflect the inherent properties of the regenerated or repair tissue (plus any suture material which may still be transmitting force).

                  TABLE 3     ______________________________________     Time-Related Changes in Material Properties of Treated     versus Sham Control Rabbit Achilles Tendon Repairs*.sup.,+               Modulus                      Stress.sub.max                               SED.sub.max                                        SED.sub.failure     ______________________________________      4 Weeks            Treated     15.8%    20.7%                                        24.7%                                               20.0%            (MSC            Implants)            Sham      9.9     11.3   11.2    9.9            Control      8 Weeks            Treated  26.8     25.4   20.6   18.1            (MSC            Implants)            Sham     18.4     17.3   13.3   13.7            Control     12 Weeks            Treated  33.9     37.3   35.5   31.1            (MSC            Implants)            Sham     20.1     19.2   14.4   14.3            Control     ______________________________________      *All values are expressed as percent of normal rabbit Achilles tendons.      .sup.+ All treated values significantly greater than paired sham values      for all time points, and all response measures (P < 0.05, n = 13)

The reported material properties were generally lower as percentages of normal than were the structural properties, reflecting the greater difficulty in re-establishing a normal material as seen in all soft tissue repair models. However, these percentages generally increased with time post-surgery, reflecting the gradual decrease in tissue cross-sectional area resulting from progressive tissue remodeling. (Average cross-sectional areas for treated specimens were 15.1 mm² at 4 weeks, 10.5 mm² at 8 weeks, and 7.4 mm² at 12 weeks, compared to 8.4 mm² at 4 weeks, 6.3 mm² at 8 weeks, and 5.4 mm² at 12 weeks for controls.) The modules (i.e., the ability of the tissue to develop an increment of stress for a unit amount of strain, measured as the slope of the linear part of the stress strain curve) of the treated tissues was 15.8% of normal after only 4 weeks, while the suture control was only 9.9%. The average moduli for the treated and control tissues increased over time, achieving values of one-third (33.9%) and one-fifth (20.1%) of normal by 12 weeks, respectively. Thus, both the treated and control tissues increased their moduli over time from relatively low values at one month, with the treated tissue exhibiting a 50% greater modulus at 3 months than the suture control (FIG. 2).

Maximum stress also increased over time for both the treated and control tissues, reading values of about one-third (37.3%) and one-fifth (19.2%) of normal, respectively, by 12 weeks. (FIG. 2) Thus, the maximum force per unit area increased with time for both tissue types, the treated achieving twice the maximum stress of the control by 3 months after surgery.

The energy densities (energies per unit volume) of tissue at maximum stress and failure did not change greatly between 4 and 8 weeks, but achieved about one-third (treated) and one-seventh (control) of normal values by 12 weeks. Thus the unit energy (area under the stress-strain curve) transmitted by the treated repair tissue increases between 8 and 12 weeks, reaching values which are twice the energy density of the controls. (FIG. 2)

Statistical Analysis.

The treated and control values (structural and material properties) were compared at each time period using both paired differences (i.e., within animals) and unpaired difference testing (i.e., between group means). Using either paired or unpaired analyses, all but two structural and material properties (maximum displacement and maximum strain) were significantly greater for the treated tissues than for the controls at 4, 8, and 12 weeks after surgery (p<0.05, n=13 pairs). The fact that displacement to maximum force and strain to maximum stress were not significantly affected by treatment is not surprising, since in nearly all studies they have performed, Dr. Butler and his coworkers at the University of Cincinnati have found no effect of any treatment on these two parameters.

EXAMPLE 3

In Vitro Characterization of MSCs in Gels.

Histology was performed on MSCs in the MSC/biomatrix construct and in micromass cultures (a 300 (μl) drop on a 35 mm culture dish). After incubation, these cultures were fixed in 10% buffered formalin and processed for paraffin embedded histology.

Cells in the micromass drop arrayed themselves radially in a starburst pattern with elongated morphology in the central zone and more rounded morphology in the peripheral zone of the gel. In 24 hours, these cells contracted the gel to 30-50% of the original drop diameter (from 11.5 mm to 3.5 mm). The gels contracted inwardly overall, but radially outward from the central zone, leaving a hole in the center of the gel.

Cells in the contracted-gel/suture were elongated and oriented in the longitudinal axis of the suture. These cells contracted the gel radially to about 30% of the original diameter (from 6 mm to 1.5 mm) in 24 hours. There is also axial contraction, but to a lesser extent. The cell density in the gel was high, indicating a high cell viability through the gel preparation and contraction process. The predominant fibroblastic cell type is interspersed with rounded cells in small lacunae in the matrix that compose about 20% of the total population.

These in vitro studies demonstrate that the MSC construct retains cell viability, responds to the surrounding matrix, and aligns cells along the axis of applied tensile loading.

Histological Observations of Achilles Tendon Implants.

Interpretation of histological results of rabbit Achilles tendon repair samples must be made requires the use of histological sections achieved through the mid-body of the tissue, so that a significant segment of the suture is visible, for identification of repair tissue properties with confidence. In samples evaluated in this study, about 24 of the 40 samples (20 pairs of tendons) were sectioned clearly along the suture axis. Most sections, treated or controls, contained some regions of disorganized and organized tissue.

4 Week Time Group: Controls

Cells in the non-treated controls exhibit a greater density than in normal unoperated tissue. The cell shape ranges from oval to elongated with fibroblastic morphologies. When viewed at lower magnifications (not shown), oriented fibers and cells in the control repair tissue are observed in thin zones, primarily along the suture. The bulk of the tissue in the repair site is a loose, erratically snaking fibrous connective tissue. The groups of fibers are seen to swirl in and out of the plane with little axial orientation. Birefringence of repair tissue in the control samples was very low as compared to normal tendon fibers.

4 Week Time Group: Treated

The amount of matrix in the 4 week treated samples is noticeably greater than in contralateral controls. Cell density is quite high. Generally, when viewed at lower magnifications, cells have a mixture of rounded and elongated morphologies. The matrix fibers are smaller in diameter than those of normal tissue (20%-30%) and much more varied in diameter. Most fibers in the treated samples are well-aligned parallel to the longitudinal axis of the tendon. These longitudinally oriented fibers of the treated samples form wide avenues along both sides of the central suture with little or no loose connective tissue present. There is little crimp in the fibers at this stage of repair, although this characteristic varies in different regions of the tissue. In the treated MSC-implanted repair tissue, certain groups of fibers demonstrate the same level of birefringence, although with shorter crimp period, as that seen in normal tissue.

8 Week Time Group: Controls

Cells in the control tendons range morphologically from densely populated areas of elliptical cells to less frequent thin elongated cells spaced out over the matrix. More rounded cells appear to synthesize collagen with some crimping. Repair tissue in the controls ranges from loose, very crimped strands to more densely packed filaments, but in general demonstrates the disorganized "whorls" and discontinuous bands of connective tissue. None of this tissue is birefringent under polarized light.

8 Week Time Group: Treated

Treated tendons also demonstrate a range of cellular morphologies from denser areas of elliptical cells to less frequent thin elongated cells. The collagen fibers in the treated samples tend to be grouped in dense cords or bundles organized along the long axis of the tendon. Birefringence of the treated samples demonstrates more densely packed fibers, similar to normal tissue, but with much shorter crimp periods.

12 Week Time Group: Controls

Control repair tissues consistently have less quantity of tissue than treated, with more of the repair tissue present being loose, undulating connective tissue and fewer areas of dense, longitudinally oriented fibers.

12 Week Time Group: Treated

The 12 week treated implants are similar to the 8 week samples. Cells are generally thin, elongated fibroblastic in appearance, and are more densely distributed in matrix than as is seen in normal unoperated tendon, especially along the suture and around knots. In zones more peripheral from the future, the cells are still rounded to oval-shaped, with the same dense distribution, Birefringence reveals the fibers to have crimp periods with shorter periodicity than normal tendon.

CITED LITERATURE

1. Goodship A. E. and Cooke P. Bicompatibility of tendon and ligament prostheses. Critical Reviews in Biocompatibility 1986;2(4):303-334.

2. Bonnarens F. O. and Drez, D., Jr. Biomechanics of artificial ligaments and associated problems. In: Jackson D. W., Drez Jr. D., Eds. The anterior cruciate deficient knee: New concepts in ligament Repair, St. Louis: C.V. Mosby Co., 1987;239-253.

3. Goldstein J. D., Tria A. J., Zawadshy J. P., Kato Y. P., Christiansen D., Silver F. H. Development of a Reconstituted Collagen Tendon Prosthesis: A preliminary study. J Bone Jt Surig 1989;71A(8):1183-1191.

4. Hsu S. Y. C., Cheng J. C. Y., Chong Y. W., Leung P. C. Glutaraldehyde-treated bioprosthetic substitute for rabbit Achilles tendon. Biomaterials 1989;10:258-264.

5. Kato Y. P., Dunn M. G., Zawadsky J. P., Tria A. J., Silver F. H. Regeneration of Achilles tendon with a collagen tendon Prosthesis: Results of a one-year implantation study. J Bone Jt Surg 1991;73A:561-574.

6. Kato Y. P., Dunn M. G., Tria A. J., Zawadsky J. P., Silver F. H. Preliminary assessment of a collagen fiber ACL prosthesis. Proceedings of the 17th Annual Meeting of the Society for Biomaterials, Abstract 265, Scottsdale Ariz. 1991.

7. Dunn M. G., Tria A. J., Kato Y. P., Bechler J. R., Ochner R. S., Zawadsky J. P. and Silver F. H. Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction using a composite collagenous prosthesis. A biomechanical and histologic study in rabbits. Am. J. Sports Med. 1991;20:507-515.

8. Klompmaker J., Jansen H. W. B., Veth R. P. H., de Groot J. H., Nijenhuis A. J., Pennings A. J.. Porous polymer implant for repair of meniscal lesions: A preliminary study in dogs. Biomaterials 1991;12:810-816.

9. Henning C. E., Lynch M. A., Yearout K. M., Vequist S. W., Stallbaumer R. J., Decker K. A. Arthroscopic meniscal repair using an exogenous fibrin clot. Clin Ortho 1990;252:64-72.

10. Wood D. J., Minns R. J., Strover A. Replacement of the rabbit medial meniscus with a polyester-carbon fibre bioprosthesis. Biomaterials 1990; 11: 13-16.

11. Stone K. R., Rodkey W. G., Webber R. J., McKinney L., Steadman J. R. Collagen-based prostheses for meniscal regeneration. Clin Ortho 1990;252:129-135.

12. Grande D. A., Pitman M. I., Peterson L., Menche O., Klein M. The repair of experimentally produced defects in rabbit articular cartilage by autologous chondrocyte transplantation. J Ortho Res 1989;7:208-218.

13. Grande D. A.. Technique for healing lesions in cartilage. U.S. Pat. No. 4,846,835, Jul. 11, 1989.

14. von Schroeder H. P., Kwan M., Amiel D., Coutts R. D. The use of polylactic acid matrix and periosteal grafts for the reconstruction of rabbit knee articular defects. J Biomed Mat Res 1991;25:329-339.

15. Wakitani S., Kimura T., Hirooka A., et al. Repair of rabbit articular surfaces with allograft chondrocytes embedded in collagen gel. J Bone Joint Surg 1989;71B: 74-80.

16. Wang E. A., Rosen V., D'Alessandro J. S., et al. Recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein induces bone formation. Biochem 1990;87:220-224.

17. Syftestad G. T., Lucas P. A., Ohgushi H., Caplan Al. Chondrogenesis as an in vitro response to bioactive factors extracted from adult bone and nonskeletal tissues. In: Thomhill T., SennA, eds. Development and diseases of cartilage and bone matrix., UCLA Symposium Volume, New York: Alan Liss, Inc., 1987;187-199.

18. Syftestad G. T., Lucas P. A., Caplan Al. The in vitro chondrogenic response of limb bud mesenchyme to a water-soluble fraction prepared from demineralized bone matrix. Differentiation 1985;29:230-237.

19. Lucas P. A., Syftestad G. T., Caplan Al. A water-soluble fraction from adult bone stimulates the differentiation of cartilage in explants of embryonic muscle. Differentiation 1988;37:47-52.

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25. Caplan Al., Fink D. J., Goto T., Linton A. E., Young R. G., Wakitani S., Goldberg V. M., Haynesworth S. E. Mesenchymal Stem Cells and Tissue Repair In: Jackson D. W. et al., eds. The Anterior Cruciate Ligament: Current and Future Concepts, New York: Raven Press, Ltd., 1993; 405-417. 

What is claimed is:
 1. An implant for repair of a tissue defect in an animal in need thereof, which implant comprises:a contracted gel matrix; and mesenchymal stem cells within said contracted gel matrix, said cells having contracted said gel matrix, said matrix having been contracted in tension in a given direction.
 2. The implant of claim 1 wherein the gel matrix is a collagen gel.
 3. The implant of claim 2 wherein the cells are human mesenchymal stem cells.
 4. A process for repairing a soft tissue defect in an animal comprising:implanting into a soft tissue defect in an animal the implant of claim
 1. 5. The process of claim 4 wherein the soft tissue defect is a tendon defect.
 6. The process of claim 4 wherein the soft tissue defect is a fibrocartilage defect.
 7. The process of claim 4 wherein the soft tissue defect is an articular cartilage defect.
 8. The process of claim 4 wherein the soft tissue defect is a ligament defect.
 9. The process of claim 5 wherein the cells are human mesenchymal stem cells.
 10. The implant of claim 1 further including a load bearing member contiguous with and attached to said gel matrix along said given direction between first and second spaced locations for extending across said defect.
 11. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member is elongated in said given direction.
 12. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member is a filament.
 13. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member is selected from the group consisting of a single filament, multiple filaments, biodegradable fibrous materials, woven filaments, collagen fibers and at least one flexible, pliable filament.
 14. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member is preloaded in tension along the given direction during the contracting of said gel matrix.
 15. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member is at least one filament with respective ends that extend beyond said first and second locations.
 16. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member exhibits a tensile load while said gel matrix is being contracted, said load being applied to the load bearing member at first and second load bearing member ends with said gel located intermediate said ends.
 17. The implant of claim 10 wherein the load bearing member is a suture whose ends are for attachment to said tissue with the suture and gel matrix for extending across said defect.
 18. An implant for repair of a tissue defect in an animal in need thereof, which implant comprises:a contracted gel matrix; a suture embedded in said gel matrix along an axial direction between first and second spaced locations; said suture having first and second ends each extending beyond a different location externally said gel matrix; and mesenchymal stem cells within said gel matrix, said matrix having been contracted in tension in said axial direction in response to said cells.
 19. The implant of claim 18 wherein the suture is preloaded with a tensile load during the contracting of said gel matrix.
 20. An implant for repair of a tissue defect in an animal in need thereof, which implant comprises:a cell contracted collagen gel matrix extending in an axial direction; a load bearing member contiguous with and attached to said gel matrix along said axial direction between first and second spaced locations for extending across said defect; and mesenchymal stem cells within said contracted gel matrix, said matrix having been contracted in tension in said axial direction in response to said cells. 